Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Think quick, rhyme slick: Flick looks at freestyle rap

Chuck D narrates as Ice-T, RZA and more talk about the subgenre

- By Richard Guzma■ riguzman@scng.com

For many rappers, it's been a way to earn instant street cred to come up with rhymes delivered on the spot, often in complex word battles with other lyricists.

Now a new documentar­y filled with a who's who of hip-hop stars dives deep into the art of freestyle rapping.

“Generally rappers think of freestyle as being improvisat­ion, working with the moment, the crowd, whatever is in front of you,” said Frank Meyer, who directed “Freestyle 101: Hip-Hop History,” streaming on Prime Video, Google Play and YouTube.

The documentar­y is narrated by Chuck D of Public Enemy and traces the evolution of freestyle rap, which is often compared to improvisat­ional jazz for its spontaneou­s nature, from its roots in 1970s New York to modern-day freestyler­s waging lyrical battles on the East and West coasts.

“Essentiall­y you're judged based on the crowd reaction and how hard you hit the other guy, how smooth you were with your execution and your performanc­e, because there's a certain amount of theatrics,” Meyer said.

His film includes interviews with stars like Ice-T, RZA of the

Wu Tang Clan, The Game, Chali 2na of Jurassic 5, Sean Kingston and Ras Kass, a member of The HRSMN and Golden State Warriors.

“It's what gave me my first opportunit­y, period,” Kass said. “It's about having the witticism to turn on a dime and be able to captivate the crowd and get people excited and reacting,” he added.

And while not every rapper comes from a freestyle background, and it's not a prerequisi­te for being in the music business, Kass said freestyle skills definitely earn rappers respect.

“It's like if you meet (NHL great Wayne) Gretzky and all of the sudden he's like, `I don't really ice skate,' well it's like you don't play hockey,” Kass said.

Meyer, who besides being a film director is a punk rock veteran as the guitarist and frontman of The Streetwalk­in' Cheetahs and other bands, came up with the idea of the documentar­y while hosting a music show on G4 TV, an online channel owned by NBC.

“I talked to rappers the way you would talk to guitar players in terms of their technique and their influences and how they use their instrument­s and how they were doing this amazing thing,” he said.

The documentar­y is not only a history lesson in the art form, it's a look forward as it follows New York battle rapper Iron Solomon and L.A. indie rapper Open Mike Eagle as they use their freestyle skills in local battles and to navigate today's music industry.

“I really hope to shine a light on all the amazing artists in this movie, and there are some famous ones like Ice-T and The Game and Cypress Hill and Wu

Tang Clan. But there are a lot of undergroun­d artists who are just as incredible who people may not have heard about,” Meyer said.

The film comes during a milestone year for hip-hop as it marks 50 years as a genre. It all started at a party in the Bronx in the summer of 1973 when DJ Kool Herc used two turntables to switch back and forth between two records to isolate and extend the most danceable parts of the song, or the break beat.

And just as hip-hop was born, so was freestylin­g.

“People were freestylin­g before they were even putting together rap songs,” Meyer said. “In that sense freestylin­g is one of the foundation­s of hip-hop,” he said.

 ?? COURTESY OF JASON VALDEZ ?? Culver City-based punk rock veteran Frank Meyer directed the film on freestyle rap. “Essentiall­y you're judged based on the crowd reaction and how hard you hit the other guy,” he says.
COURTESY OF JASON VALDEZ Culver City-based punk rock veteran Frank Meyer directed the film on freestyle rap. “Essentiall­y you're judged based on the crowd reaction and how hard you hit the other guy,” he says.
 ?? COURTESY OF FRANK MEYER ?? “Freestyle 101: Hip-Hop History” puts the spotlight on rappers who specialize in improvisin­g lyrics, often to do battle with peers.
COURTESY OF FRANK MEYER “Freestyle 101: Hip-Hop History” puts the spotlight on rappers who specialize in improvisin­g lyrics, often to do battle with peers.

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